Friday, April 18, 2014

Of Strength and Beauty
I have always been strong. I don’t remember a time when I wasn’t – when I couldn’t lift or throw whatever I wanted. That strength was unfortunately hidden behind some baby fat, later chubbiness, even into my teens and early twenties.

As a child of the 1970’s, my strength was simultaneously viewed with admiration and confusion by my family. No one knew where or from whom this innate strength came, nor what I “should” do with it.

My mother pressured my sisters and I to live up to her ideal of the feminine physique. This was accomplished both by her own example of nearly constant dieting as well as her comments. Some of what she said was subtle, and much was not. The message was clear: you need to be small to be feminine.

Like many young women of my time, I experimented. There was volleyball and track, at which I excelled. Softball, my sister’s sport, was elusive to me. Basketball wasn’t right for my average height and build. Cheerleading was fun, but not much of a challenge.

In young adulthood, I discovered weight lifting. Ah, now here was a place for me. I quickly learned the zen-like joy that came from counting the reps, feeling the weight, challenging myself. Seeing what was in the mirror reflect the strength I had always possessed, at last. And success was measured by what I could lift, not the size of my jeans.

My sisters, influenced by my mother’s words, found their bodies unable to meet the ideal. So they fought with themselves, resorting to bulimia and starvation to get down to the number on the scale they thought would make them feminine and therefore happy. But they weren’t happy.

I decided that if I could not be thin and healthy, I would be fat and happy. I would eat whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted, and revel in it.

And so I did. In a way, I was fighting with my body the same way my sisters had, but in a different way. I spent fifteen years being sedentary and putting on weight. I was carefree about eating, but not that much. I said that I accepted my body as it was, but I secretly wished I was smaller. Photos from those years are mostly pictures of my face as I hid behind other people in a group, or found some way to mask my size from the camera.

Many times, I thought of my excess weight as soft armor that I carried with me. I used it to keep people away, to challenge them to see me for who I really was despite the exterior.

Still, my strength was there, and when I was ready to change, it was what saved me. I started going to the gym and working out with a trainer. I learned that light weights don’t really do anything for me. I learned how to powerlift and found that I was good at it.

On impulse, I signed up for my first competition. I was so nervous, I was shaking. I didn’t have all the right equipment and had to borrow some from another competitor I’d never met. I loved every minute of it, and I even set a record. I was hooked.

That was followed by more training and more competitions, even the State Championships at which I set national records. The funny thing was – I was eating more than I had when I was heavy, but eating better, smarter. And I was getting leaner and stronger.

Around this time, I learned that I had more than just physical strength, but emotional and mental strength, too. If the “soft armor” was coming off, that was OK. I didn’t really need it.

In the last few years, all of my notions have been tested, and many of them supported. A lot of my excess weight came off, then some was put back on in the wake of my divorce. I’m still working on the right balance between work, training, and the rest of my life, which takes me to the time of my Femmeography photo shoot.

At first glance, I was tempted to be critical, even now, of the rolls and wrinkles that I wished weren’t there. So I stopped looking and waited a while before I looked at the pictures again.

On second and subsequent views, I see a woman who is strong. That’s not a surprise – I expected that.

What surprised me is that I also see a woman who has learned to be happy despite external circumstances. Someone who can still be goofy, playful, and childlike. And someone who is creative, sensual, and free. I didn’t expect that – but I cherish it.

If I could give advice to other women about their body image, I would say:

·        You are stronger and more beautiful than you think.
·        If you want to change your body (get stronger, healthier, leaner), love it the way it is first. Find something to appreciate about your body every day.
·        At the same time, your body is just the shell your soul inhabits. A beautiful exterior doesn’t counteract a withered soul, and vice-versa.
·        Every stage you are in is only temporary. If you can appreciate each stage for what it is, while not lamenting what it isn’t, you’ll be a lot happier.






  

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

The Many Kinds of Strength 

A few years ago, I became intrigued with the concept of strength. The types of strength (physical, psychological, mental, moral, and so on) and how they relate to each other as well as how they build upon each other. I'm not just talking about the relationship between physical activity and emotional well being, though that's part of it. 

I don't remember not being physically strong. Even as a kid, I could lift more and throw farther than my peers. And for a while, I could even win against most of the boys at arm wrestling (oh, how they hated that!). From a mental standpoint, I could study and concentrate on and absorb a topic for hours, if I needed to. My emotional strength...eh, not so much. It took a lot of work, a lot of life's lessons, and some professional help to get me to a good point with that...or so I thought. 

Life has a way of smacking us in the head with what we need to learn, until we really learn it. Not until we sort of learn it, or think we have, but until we have truly absorbed it into our bones. So a few years ago, life decided that I hadn't quite learned what I needed to about emotional strength, and it threw some curve balls at me. 

First, I found myself dealing with a muscle tear (previously documented in this blog). Many of the workout activities I had previously enjoyed, and counted on doing, weren't possible for several months. I had to adapt. Not supposed to stand? Construct workouts using the machines so I can sit. Still limping, making intervals on the treadmill not an option? Switch to exercise bike. And work on building emotional strength, because having something taken away that you had always counted on can be a particularly tough blow.

In pretty short order after that, I dealt with major upheaval in my personal life. So there it was again -- the opportunity to show that I had actually learned something about emotional strength, and then learn how to do it better. For me, building emotional strength has a lot to do with trust in myself. Trust that whatever happens won't break me, that I can adapt and change and come out better and wiser and yes -- stronger -- on the other side.

In the past, I have worried about what would happen when things went wrong. I stayed awake at night pondering the "what ifs" and developing contingency plans that 98% of the time didn't need to be used. What a waste of energy and sleep! Lately, I've been working on what a friend calls "sitting with the uncertainty." That means allowing events to unfold without worrying about what I can't control, confident that whatever arises will be within my ability to handle. I won't lie...that's a tough one for me. Sitting? Peacefully? Not taking action? Not running around making plans? Surely, you jest. But I'm starting to get it. 

It's also a lot about my internal dialog. I remind myself that I am strong on an almost daily basis. If it has been a tough day, I'm referring more to the physical aspect, but it still helps me to feel better. I remind myself that I have been through difficult times, and they didn't stop me.  I spend time helping other people, listening to other people, and enjoying their company.

Physical strength is easy to measure and easy (for some) to build. Emotional / psychological strength can be developed, too, but doing so is a lot more complicated. I have learned that it involves changing both how I think -- particularly my self dialog -- and how I act. 

If you want to delve more into this topic, here's a great resource: 

Monday, October 7, 2013

I'm baaaaack

So, I created this blog several years ago to chronicle my journey into fitness via power lifting. Then I put it aside for awhile when life intruded and some big changes happened.

Fast forward to today. I'm still using a lot of what I learned in power lifting in my regular workouts, but now they're the basis for my foray into Scottish Highland Games.

For those of you not in the know, this basically means that instead of just picking up heavy things, I'm now throwing them as well. Also, Highland Games has 7 events instead of three. More variety! More fun! More opportunities to get messed up, if you're not careful.

My mind is percolating with all sorts of thoughts about what to write about next. I've missed the writing, though it isn't that I haven't been writing, I just haven't been blogging.

Stay tuned; I'm pondering some topics and will be back on the bandwagon soon.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

A fun morning with the girls

Today, I worked out with some other female powerlifters (all nationally and/or world ranked). Now, usually other women kind of drive me nuts, but this group was a lot of fun. I wanted to learn about how they were structuring their workouts during the week and in particular about their bench workouts.

I have been doing a pretty simple workout schedule - squat Monday, bench Wednesday, and deadlift Friday. However, other lifters incorporate another day of bench work that goes something like - heavy bench Monday, squat Tuesday or Wednesday, light bench (for speed and power, plus tricep and shoulder work) Thursday, deadlift Friday. So, I wanted to know what they were doing on that light bench day and also get some pointers on bench form, as all of these other women are very strong on bench.

I ended up benching for almost an hour and getting a lot of tips. Bad news: there are a lot of subtle little things to work on. Good news: they're little things, and since I don't have any imminent meets, I have plenty of time to master them.

People tend to think that powerlifting is just a bunch of muscle-bound freaks lifting heavy stuff, but each of the lifts has a lot of technical aspects and fine nuances.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Vanity

I was just checking out the website of a local photographer who was at the Olympia meet, since the person taking photos for me didn't get all my lifts. How is it that I am making some sort of face in EVERY SINGLE PICTURE?!? Well, not in the bench press ones, but you can't really see my face in those because of the spotters. Maybe it IS better to take the photos from a distance...yeesh. Of course, can one really be expected to look pretty while wearing that much spandex and lifting heavy weights? Probably not. But a girl can still hope. *sigh*

Monday, March 9, 2009

State Championship Results!

Hi, I'm back from the Washington State Power Lifting championships in Olympia. Here's how I did:

Squat 275.5 lbs
Bench press 143.5 lbs
Dead lift 325.0 lbs
TOTAL 744 lbs

Not bad for just my third competition, and for lifting raw no less. :-) These numbers break my prior Washington State USAPL records and are American records as well.

I had a tough time resting the week before the meet, as I'm so used to working out intensely all the time, but it was definitely worth it. What's next? Maybe the Raw Nationals in July...

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

New Coach, New Training Regimen

Ok, so at the beginning of this year (2009) I started working with a powerlifting coach, the legendary Andrew "Bull" Stewart. He had me doing a lot of conditioning workouts in December, then in Jan. we started our pre-event cycle working up to the March 7 Wa State Championship meet - it's an eight week cycle. Here's what those workouts look like:

WEEK ONE:

SQUAT DAY
Squats at 70% 1RM* 2 x 8 reps
Pause squats (slightly lighter weight, pause at bottom for 1 second)
Leg press 3 x 8 (you'll do this at heavier weight than the squats, it's easier)
Calf press 3 x 8 - all directions (toes straight, outward and in)
Hip abductor / adductor / glutes / front hip flexor 3 x 10

BENCH DAY
Bench at 70% 1RM 2 x 8 reps
Flat bench dumbbell press 3 x 8
Incline press 3 x 8
Shoulder press 3 x 8
Bench with close grip for triceps 3 x 8
Tricep push down with t-bar 3 x 8 - 10
Tricep push down with rope 3 x 8 - 10

DEADLIFT DAY
Deadlift at 70% 1RM 2 x 8 reps
Deadlift from knees 2 or 3 x 10
Hex bar 3 x 8
Power cleans 3 x 8
Back rows 3 x 8 - 10

From here, I am increasing the weight 20 pounds per week on squats and DLs, and 10 pounds per week on bench, and dropping one or two reps per week (still doing 2 sets).

week 2 - 2 x 7 reps
week 3 - 2 x 6 reps
week 4 - 2 x 5 reps
week 5 - 2 x 3 reps
week 6 - 2 x 2 reps
week 7 - 2 reps
week 8 - 1 rep
rest one week prior to competition

*calculate 1RM based on prior maximum done in gym or competition.